
I'll wear it to bed, says Emma Thompson after award win at Hay Festival
I'll wear it to bed, says Emma Thompson after award win at Hay Festival1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleEleri GriffithsBBC WalesGetty ImagesActress and writer Emma Thompson has been awarded this year's...
Key developments are emerging from the global stage. I'll wear it to bed, says Emma Thompson after award win at Hay Festival1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleEleri GriffithsBBC WalesGetty ImagesActress and writer Emma Thompson has been awarded this year's Hay Festival Medal for DramaActress and writer Dame Emma Thompson has been awarded this year's Hay Festival Medal for Drama. The Love Actually star was honoured at Hay Festival in Hay-on-Wye, where she spoke with author Elizabeth Day about the novels that shaped her life. Hay Festival chief executive Julie Finch praised Thompson's "intelligence, absolute wit, humour and fearless" storytelling.
She said Thompson's career had given audiences "real insight into humanity" through her work on screen and in literature. During the event, Thompson reflected on her childhood, feminism and the books that changed her life. Thompson said the first novel she was inspired by was Beatrix Potter's The Tale of Mr Todd, despite its dark themes.
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"The reason it was one of my favourites is because it was the longest," she said. She explained that she and her siblings would deliberately choose long bedtime stories to spend more time listening to their father read aloud, describing his voice as "honeyed". She said those moments helped shape her lifelong love of language and storytelling.
Thompson said she admired Potter's writing because it "didn't talk down" or "patronise" children. "Children are the sacred audience. You must do your very best work for them because they're absorbing so much," she said.
Reflecting on her upbringing, she added that she felt "very, very lucky" to have been raised by parents who never patronised her, encouraging her intellectual curiosity from an early age. Thompson said her love of reading continued into adulthood, with authors such as Jane Austen and fantasy writers shaping her imagination and worldview. "Books devoured me, they ate me," she said.
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"I couldn't stop reading them. I was addicted to story. "However, she said many of the female characters she encountered in literature left her feeling conflicted about her own identity.
"I didn't fit any of the patterns of any of the characters I was reading in my favourite books," she said. "It was a conflicted time because I thought I'm not like those women so where do I go to find something that fits with what I feel about life and the appetites I have. "Reflecting on Victorian literature, she described many women writers as being "still women in disguise", referring to the restrictions and limited educational opportunities women faced at the time.
"I wonder how women were able to survive the constant beating down on them of people saying they shouldn't be writing," she said. Thompson said she felt fortunate to grow up surrounded by books and intellectual discussion, but noted that many women historically had been denied the same opportunities. "Women still don't have access to books, which we need to develop our minds," she said.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





